and Detroit, it is broadly applicable to temperate urban environments across North America. While it covers the area bounded by Montreal, Boston, Washington, D.C. Peter Del Tredici's lushly illustrated field guide to wild urban plants of the northeastern United States is the first of its kind. Around the world, wild plants help to make urban environments more habitable for people. On their own and free of charge, these plants provide ecological services including temperature reduction, oxygen production, carbon storage, food and habitat for wildlife, pollution mitigation, and erosion control on slopes. However, there are a number of plants that manage to grow spontaneously in sidewalk cracks and roadside meridians, flourish along chain-link fences and railroad tracks, line the banks of streams and rivers, and emerge in the midst of landscape plantings and trampled lawns. Characterized by an abundance of pavement, reflected heat, polluted air and contaminated soil, our cities and towns may seem harsh and unwelcoming to vegetation.
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